Below
is the concise summary of a most amazing article published in the
October 1946 edition of Harper's Magazine, just over a year after the
end of WWII. This highly intriguing article reveals that the US
government recovered many tons worth of secret documents from the Nazis.
These astonishing documents showed beyond a shadow of a doubt
that in almost all areas of scientific research, the Nazis were far
ahead of the allied forces – often by a factor of 10 years or more.

How
was this possible? With similar financial resources and brain power to
that of the allies, how did they make such huge leaps in technology in
such a short span of time? It doesn't really make sense unless you
consider the possibility that they might have had access to technology
from some advanced civilization. Could they have recovered one or more
crashed UFOs and back engineered the technology? Sound far fetched? Can
you come up with a better explanation? For solid evidence of this
possibility, click here.

Note: To read the entire fascinating article, click here. To verify this on the Harper's website, click here.

Secrets by the ThousandsBy C. Lester Walker

Someone
wrote to Wright Field recently, saying he understood this country had
got together quite a collection of enemy war secrets, that many were
now on public sale, and could he, please, be sent everything on German
jet engines. The Air Documents Division of 'the Army Air Forces'
answered: "Sorry – but that would be fifty tons." Moreover, that fifty
tons was just a small portion of what is today undoubtedly the biggest
collection of captured enemy war secrets ever assembled.

It
may interest you to learn that the war secrets in this collection run
into the thousands, that the mass of documents is mountainous, and that
there has never before been anything quite comparable to it. Wright
Field is working from a documents "mother lode" of fifteen hundred tons.
In Washington, the Office of Technical Services ... reports that tens
of thousands of tons of material are involved. It is estimated that over
a million separate items must be handled, and that they, very likely,
contain practically all the scientific, industrial, and military secrets
of Germany.

How
the collection came to be goes back, for beginnings, to one day in 1944
when the Allied Combined Chief' of Staff set in motion a colossal search
for war secrets in occupied German territory. They created a group of
military-civilian teams, termed the Joint Intelligence Objectives
Committee, which was to follow the invading armies into Germany and
uncover all her military, scientific, and industrial secrets for early
use against Japan.

What
did we find? You'd like some outstanding examples from the war secrets
collection? The head of the communications unit of Technical Industrial
Intelligence Branch [TIIB] opened his desk drawer and took out the
tiniest vacuum tube I had ever seen. It was about half thumb-size.
"Notice it is heavy porcelain – not glass – and thus virtually
indestructible. It is a thousand watt – one-tenth the size of similar
American tube. Today our manufacturers know the secret of making it.

He
[also] showed me then what had been two of the most closely-guarded
technical secrets of the war: the infra-red device which the Germans
invented for seeing at night, and the remarkable diminutive generator
which operated it. The diminutive generator – five inches across –
stepped up current from an ordinary flashlight battery to 15,000 volts.
It had a walnut-sized motor which spun a rotor at 10,000 rpm. The
generator then ran 3,000 hours!

"You
see this..." the head of Communications Unit, TIIB, said to me. It was
metal, and looked like a complicated doll's house with the roof off. "It
is the chassis or frame, for a radio. To make the same thing, Americans
would machine cut, hollow, shape, fit – a dozen different processes.
This is done on a press in one operation. It is called the 'cold
extrusion' process. We do it with some soft, splattery metals. But by
this process the Germans do it with cold steel! Thousands of parts now
made as castings or drop forgings or from malleable iron can now be made
this way. The production speed increase is a little matter of one thousand per cent."

But
of all the industrial secrets, perhaps, the biggest windfall came from
the laboratories and plants of the great German cartel, I. G.
Farbenindustrie. Never before, it is claimed, was there such a
store-house of secret information. It covers liquid and solid fuels,
metallurgy, synthetic rubber, textiles, chemicals, plastics, drugs,
dyes. One American dye authority declares: "It includes the production
know-how and the secret formulas for over fifty thousand dyes. Many of
them are faster and better than ours. Many are colors we were never able
to make. The American dye industry will be advanced at least ten
years."

In
matters of food, medicine, and branches of the military art the finds of
the search teams were no less impressive. Perhaps one of the most
exciting searches was also the grimmest. This was the hunt for hidden
documents which might reveal that Nazi scientists had frozen human
beings to death and then tried to bring them back to life again. Victims
had been immersed naked in ice water until they lost consciousness.
All the time elaborate testings were constantly made. Seven subjects
were chilled to death beyond revival in from fifty-three to one hundred
and six minutes.

"As
for medical secrets in this collection," one Army-surgeon has remarked,
"some of them will save American medicine years of research; some of
them are revolutionary – like, for instance, the German technique for
treatment after prolonged and usually fatal exposure to cold." This
discovery ... reversed everything medical science thought about the
subject. In every one of the dread experiments the subjects were most
successfully revived, both temporarily and permanently, by immediate
immersion in hot water. In two cases of complete standstill of heart and
cessation of respiration, a hot bath at 122 degrees brought both
subjects back to life.

Positively
ionized air was discovered to have deleterious effects upon human
well-being, and to account for the discomfort and depression felt at
times when the barometer is falling. In many persons, it was found, its
presence brought on asthma, hay fever, and nervous tension. It raised
high blood pressure, sometimes to the danger point. It would bring on
the symptoms common in mountain sickness – labored and rapid breathing,
dizziness, fatigue, sleepiness. Negatively ionized air, however, did all
the opposite. It was exhilarating, creating a feeling of high spirits
and well-being. Mental depression was wiped out by it.

And
in aeronautics and guided missiles [the secrets] proved to be downright
alarming. "The V-2 rocket, which bombed London," an Army Air Force
publication reports, "was just a toy compared to what the Germans had up
their sleeve."

When
the war ended, we now know, they had 138 types of guided missiles in
various stages of production or development, using every known kind of
remote control and fuse: radio, radar, wire, continuous wave, acoustics,
infra-red, light beams, and magnetics, to name some; and for power, all
methods of jet propulsion for either subsonic or supersonic speeds. Jet
propulsion had even been applied to helicopter flight. Little wonder, then, that today Army
Air Force experts declare publicly that in rocket power and guided
missiles the Nazis were ahead of us by at least ten years.

For
the release and dissemination of all these one-time secrets the Office
of the Publication Board was established by an order of President
Truman within ten days after Japan surrendered. Today translators and
abstracters of the Office of Technical Services [OTS], successor to the
OPB, are processing them at the rate of about a thousand a week. The
order directed that not only enemy war secrets should be published, but
also (with some exceptions) all American secrets, scientific and
technical, of all government war boards.

And
is the public doing anything with these one-time war secrets? It is
eating them up. As many as twenty thousand orders have been filled in a
month, and the order rate is now a thousand items a day. Scientists and
engineers declare that the information is "cutting years from the time
we would devote to problems already scientifically investigated."

Company
executives practically park on the OTS's front doorstep, wanting to be
first to get hold of a particular report on publication. Some
information is so valuable that to get it a single day ahead of a
competitor, may be worth thousands of dollars. A research
head of another business firm took notes for three hours in the OTS
offices one day. "Thanks very much," he said, as he stood to go, "the
notes from these documents are worth at least half a million dollars to
my company."

Note: To read the entire fascinating article, click here. To verify this article on the Harper's Magazine website, click here.
How can the Nazi technology have been so far superior to that of the
allies? For the riveting testimony of numerous military officers on the
back engineering of UFO technologies, click here.